Product Overview
Designed for intense, fast-paced games , ASUS MG248Q is a 24” Full HD gaming display with an ultra-fast 1ms response time and blazing 144Hz refresh rate to give you super-smooth gameplay. Gamer-centric features like ASUS GamePlus enhances your in-game experience, while DisplayWidget gives you easy access to various display setting.

Lightning-fast 1ms rapid response timeASUS MG248Q is the fastest in its class, boasting a 1ms response time to eliminate smearing and motion blur. This lets you react instantly to what you see onscreen, especially in fast paced games – allowing you to take corners like a pro race car driver, or get that headshot like a seasoned pro.

ASUS-exclusive GamePlus technologyASUS MG248Q features the ASUS-exclusive GamePlus hotkey to give you in-game enhancements that help you get more out of your game.A crosshair overlay provides four different crosshair options, so you can select the one that best suits the shooter you're currently playing.

ASUS-exclusive DisplayWidget softwareThe exclusive ASUS DisplayWidget is intuitive software utility that lets users tweak settings or display properties of ASUS GameVisual, App SyncTM, and Ultra-Low Blue Light technologies. Although every adjustment can be done via the OSD and the navigational joystick and buttons, it's easier via DisplayWidget. It makes accessing and using these various settings faster and easier.

NVIDIA® 3D LightBoost™ and NVIDIA® 3D Vision-Ready (compatible with the NVIDIA 3D Vision® 2 kit)ASUS MG248Q is compatible with the NVIDIA 3D Vision® 2 kit to open you up a world of 3D gaming. All you need is a NVIDIA GeForce GPU and 3D glasses, and your games and movies will be more immersive than ever before. And with the latest NVIDIA® 3D LightBoost™ Technology, you'll enjoy brighter 3D visuals, without an increase in energy consumption.

Rich connectivity options, a narrow bezel designASUS MG248Q has extensive connectivity options, including dual-link DVI-D, DisplayPort 1.2, and HDMI(v1.4) port, so you can hook it up to a wide array of multimedia devices. It has a super-narrow 1cm bezel ideal for an immersive and panoramic gaming setup.

Smart Cable ManagementA smart cable management design feature found on the stand of MG248Q helps you organize and hide cables to keep your gaming area tidy.

Ultra-Low Blue Light technologyASUS Ultra-Low Blue Light technology reduces the amount of harmful blue. You can access and select four different filter settings onscreen easily through the OSD menu or DisplayWidget interface to find one that best suits the content you're viewing.

The MG248Q gaming monitor has undergone stringent performance tests and is certified by TÜV Rheinland laboratories, a global provider of technical, safety, and certification services, to be flicker-free and to emit low blue light levels.

Ergonomically designed and wall-mountableASUS MG248Q is specially designed for long marathon gaming sessions. Its ergonomically-designed stand lets you adjust the tilt, swivel, pivot, and height of the monitor so you always find your ideal viewing position. It can also be VESA wall-mounted to fit in any limited space.

We recommend that you retain your retail packaging within the first 28 days of purchase.

This Warranty does not cover any damage due to abnormal use or conditions, misuse, neglect, abuse, accident, improper handling or storage, serial number altered, defaced or removed; or has had the warranty seal on the system altered, defaced or removed, exposure to moisture, unauthorized modifications, alterations, or repairs, improper installation, improper use of any electrical source, undue physical or electrical stress, operator error, non-compliance with instructions.

TekSpek Guides

Display Panel Types
Date Issued: 15th May 2015

Choosing a monitor is not an easy decision to make, and not just because of the large number of variations in resolution, refresh rates, sizes and connectivity options. There are also varying panel technologies used to form each display that need to be considered. These panel technologies can be grouped into three broad categories which cover the vast majority of monitors sold in the consumer market.

G-SYNC works in a surprisingly simple way - it calculates how long the present frame takes to compute and then, crucially, varies the refresh rate of the monitor to match. It works between a minimum of 33.3ms (30fps) and the maximum supported refresh of the display. The key takeaway here is that the graphics card and monitor are both synced up to one another - the monitor doesn't have the limitations imposed by a rigid, fixed-rate scanning routine.

Modern desktop computers and notebooks comprise of a CPU, motherboard, graphics, storage, and, usually an optical drive. Computers have a number of ports and sockets that enable the user to plug-in various peripherals such as a printer, USB mouse, or, perhaps most importantly of all, an Internet connection.

Keeping in tandem with technological developments, audio/video connectors continue to evolve at a steady pace. Today, the most common digital connector comes in the form of HDMI and we're here to tell you what it is, what it does, and why you might need it.

Now shipping with all but the cheapest complete PCs are LCD monitors. Advances in display manufacturing and associated cost reductions with economies of scale have brought LCD monitors into the mainstream, shipping with budget systems that start at just £400. LCD monitors come in all shapes and sizes, have differing resolutions and inputs. The purpose of this TekSpek is to provide a basic understanding of how LCDs work, delineate their desirable features, and to offer basic buying advice.

As you’ll all likely know by now, DVI is the current standard for connection of a PC or other display generator to a digital display output. You’ll recognise the multi-pin connector and know that almost all modern LCD displays have the corresponding input connector, for feeding from your PC. But do you know how DVI works? This TekSpek seeks to teach you how.

Whether the broadcasters are going HD or not, TV sets and projectors are arriving thick and fast which claim to support higher resolutions than regular telly. But HDTV is far from just one standard – it incorporates a couple of different resolutions, two different scanning modes, and a number of different frame rates. In this article, we present a guide to what all the terms actually mean.

There’s a lot more to High Definition than just having the ability to run your screen at the right resolution. With more than one type of connection available, and the thorny subject of signal encryption to contend with, just because your monitor and graphics are capable of 1,920 x 1,080 or better does not necessarily mean they will be able to display HDTV in all its glory.